The instability of China’s credit-fueled, investment-focused growth strategy is—without a doubt—one of the greatest systemic risks facing the global economy according to Hedgeye Financials analyst Jonathan Casteleyn.

“If there’s one factor to look at every week that looks a little weary, a little ominous, it’s Chinese credit growth,” says Casteleyn. This disconcerting trend is amplified by a steady climb in non-performing loans on Chinese bank balance sheets.

Here’s a look:

  • Chinese credit outstanding amounts to CNY 173.5 trillion ($26.2 trillion) as of September 30, 2017 (data released 10/15/2017), which is up CNY +19.1 trillion or +12.4% year over year.
  • Chinese non-performing loans amount to CNY 1,636 billion ($246 billion) as of June 30, 2017, which is up +13.8% year over year.

“The Chinese system has been propped up by debt-fueled growth,” Casteleyn explains in the video above from The Macro Show. “Eventually this very substantial contributor to GDP could start a banking crisis at some point.”

China’s $26 Trillion Problem & Why It’s a ‘Systemic Risk’ - 10 24 2017 7 13 59 AM

It’s difficult to pinpoint when this collapse might happen because the Chinese government’s economic data masks the underlying reality.

“It’s hard to understand when you have a state controlled media when the Chinese numbers obfuscate any sort of cyclicality or credit problems,” Castelyn says. “They tell you they grow six or seven percent on a GDP basis every quarter.”

Watch the video above for more.

China’s $26 Trillion Problem & Why It’s a ‘Systemic Risk’ - investing ideas